Paul Blanton is in prison, serving life for the death of two drug dealers and their female accomplice. He doesn’t belong there.
Paul pled self-defense, but in 1989 the Michigan courts were predominantly liberal. He was a white conservative who defended himself against black drug dealers with his own gun. The deck was stacked against him even before a trusted friend lied on the witness stand. The involvement of a rogue jury foreman sealed the deal for the prosecution.
Imprisoned for decades, Paul Blanton now tells his story. In haunting detail, he describes the emotional consequences of taking life, even in self-defense. He candidly describes the effect his psychologist-certified PTSD had on his memory and testimony, and the ways he maintains his sanity in the bleak prison landscape.
Still proud of his country, Paul speaks out against the leftist ideology that contributed to his incarceration. With nothing more to fear from those who police and enforce political correctness, he denounces liberal thought with a passion unmatched by even the most outspoken conservative journalist.